major overhaul of wireless LAN support. On some cards, it is now also
possible to create multiple APs at the same time. To reflect this
change, the wireless settings have moved to the Interfaces: assign
page, where WLAN subinterfaces can be created much like for VLANs.

Make rule moving and deletion on shaper rules page work like for firewall rules.

Initial support for USB modems

enable CPU hardware crypto support

automatically reassign available physical network interfaces if none
of the assigned interfaces in the configuration can be found on the system
(i.e. for a new installation, or when moving an existing config to new
hardware)

the "embedded" image is gone; generic-pc-serial should now be used for PC Engines and Soekris boards

The
current set of builds have the new Intel drivers for em/igb/ixgb/ixgbe
(Thanks Ermal!) and should support i210 and i354 and others, and should
hopefully fix issues that have been observed with ixgb/ixgbe drivers.

Give them a spin, especially if you have hardware that could benefit from the new drivers.

It’s our big 20th episode! We’re going to sit down for a chat with Neel
Natu and Peter Grehan, the developers of bhyve. Not familiar with bhyve?
Our tutorial will show you all you need to know about this awesome new
virtualization technology. Answers to your questions and all the latest
news, here on BSD Now – the place to B.. SD.

Isaac (.ike) Levy, Senior Unix System Administrator at National
Hockey League (http://www.linkedin.com/in/dotike) will be presenting
“pfSense Practical Experiences: from home routers, to High-Availability
Datacenter Deployments” at the Tokyo FreeBSD Benkyokai (FreeBSD Study
Session) Group on February 17, 2014.http://atnd.org/events/47084
Ike states that his main objective in Tokyo is to get some real help with the Japanese translation of pfSense.
Ike recently committed “Phase 1″ (machine translation) of this effort, which you can view at GitHub.

Joe Marcus Clarke, aka marcus@, has stepped down from his duties on theÂ FreeBSD Ports Management Team.
Joe was our longest serving member of the team. Among his
manyÂ accomplishments was being the repocopy source of authority,
instrumental inÂ championing tinderbox development and maintaining
portlint.
On behalf of the Ports Management team, we would like to thank Joe for hisÂ many years of service and dedication.
Thomas
on behalf of portmgr@

There are no binary packages built for dports, on DragonFly 3.7, for 32-bit machines, at this time. Pierre Abbat found this out. You can build from source, of course, or just use 3.6 packages. Don’t forget -DBATCH to avoid getting asked for build options when building from source.